Monday, December 13, 2010

Vietnam's forest lands leased cheap to foreign companies

Vietnam's forest lands leased cheap to foreign companiesVietnam’s forests are being leased to foreign companies at excessively low prices, the National Assembly’s Committee of Sciences, Technologies and Environment have reported to lawmakers.

In its latest report, the committee quoted the statistics of the Department of Forestry as saying that as of August, entirely foreign-owned companies have been licensed to grow forests on a total of 288,974 hectares of land.

Hong Kong-owned InnovGreen Company’s leased land accounted for 87 percent of it, and so far has been provided with 8,123 hectares. 

However, the company has submitted only US$77,946 to the state budget, or $9.58 per hectare, which is too low, the committee noted in its report.

Of further concern is the fact that some leased lands are located in locations that could undermine national security, while some were already given to locals in writing but later were leased to foreign businesses, it added.

In the meantime, local farmers currently have high demand for land on which to plant forests, due to recent progresses in planting techniques and increases in timber prices, it said.

The committee proposed reviewing leasing lands to foreign companies so that it can secure locals’ benefits and national defense and be legal, local news website Vietnamnet reported.

Also in its report, the committee said more wild fires have been recorded this year.

As of July, 5,327.79 hectares of forests across the country suffered fires, four times higher than the previous year, it said, partly attributing to unexpected weather happenings and long droughts.

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Mother asks police to investigate child’s accident at school

Mother asks police to investigate child’s accident at schoolA woman in Ho Chi Minh City has asked police to investigate a case where her four-year-old son was critically injured at his nursery.

Du Thi Thanh Thuy Friday said that on September 17 her son, Le Quang Vinh, was hospitalized with multiple injuries to the head, eyes, limbs and stomach.

At first, Tran Thi Xuan Nu, Vinh's teacher at Hoa Lan Nursery in Tan Phu District, said he fell down the stairs, according to Thuy.

However, doctors refused to believe Nu and the teacher later added that Vinh had been stuck in the school's food elevator, she said.

In a report addressed to the Tan Phu education division four days later, Nu said she put Vinh in the elevator as punishment for refusing to eat his food. She closed the door and put it into operation so as to scare him.

According to Thuy, her son has undergone a couple of operations over the past month. He is still scared of strangers, refuses to return home, which is near the school, and cries a lot.

Meanwhile, a representative from the nursery said on Friday that Tan Phu Commune authorities have temporarily closed the school from November 1 to 21.

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Mother asks police to investigate child’s accident at school

Mother asks police to investigate child’s accident at schoolA woman in Ho Chi Minh City has asked police to investigate a case where her four-year-old son was critically injured at his nursery.

Du Thi Thanh Thuy Friday said that on September 17 her son, Le Quang Vinh, was hospitalized with multiple injuries to the head, eyes, limbs and stomach.

At first, Tran Thi Xuan Nu, Vinh's teacher at Hoa Lan Nursery in Tan Phu District, said he fell down the stairs, according to Thuy.

However, doctors refused to believe Nu and the teacher later added that Vinh had been stuck in the school's food elevator, she said.

In a report addressed to the Tan Phu education division four days later, Nu said she put Vinh in the elevator as punishment for refusing to eat his food. She closed the door and put it into operation so as to scare him.

According to Thuy, her son has undergone a couple of operations over the past month. He is still scared of strangers, refuses to return home, which is near the school, and cries a lot.

Meanwhile, a representative from the nursery said on Friday that Tan Phu Commune authorities have temporarily closed the school from November 1 to 21.

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Heavy rains in central region leave at least three dead, two missing

Heavy rains in central region leave at least three dead, two missingAt least three people were killed and two went missing while many roads and railways were damaged in the heavy rains over the weekend in the central region of Vietnam.

First statistics showed that three people in Khanh Hoa Province were killed, one electrocuted, one drowned and another wiped away in the water. They have not been identified, Saigon Tiep Thi said Sunday

More than twenty houses in Nha Trang, the province's resort town were collapsed and hundreds of others were 1-1.5 meters flooded.

Meanwhile, Van Cong Trai, the owner of a fishing boat from Binh Dinh Province that was caught in stormy waters on Saturday, has been reported missing along with Nguyen Van Loi, captain of a boat from Nghe An that sank on Friday.

All seven other people on Trai’s boat and the three on Loi’s boat were rescued.

Also on Saturday, the engine of a fishing boat from Binh Dinh carrying ten people cut out in rough waters. As of Saturday night, it is unknown if any rescue attempts have been made.

On Saturday morning, two ships that were anchored off Quang Ngai Province sank, causing damage amounting to more than VND300 million (US$15,400).

Rough waters have prevented rescuers from bringing the ships to the surface.

In related news, the heavy downpours flooded many roads in Phu Yen Province by up to one meter in some places.

As of Saturday, many communes cannot be reached, and flights to and from Ho Chi Minh City have been canceled.

Cam Ranh Airport in Khanh Hoa also canceled eight flights to Hanoi, HCMC and Da Nang on Friday.

Many trains came to a standstill as landslides damaged the north-south railway line in several places.

Authorities in Khanh Hoa and Ninh Thuan have planned to evacuate residents to high places as water levels are rising quickly.

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Natural disasters have big impact in October

Natural disasters have big impact in October Natural disasters left 173 dead or missing and injured 168 others in the month to October 21, reported the Statistics General Department.

Damages were estimated at over 8.5 trillion VND, of which the central province of Ha Tinh alone suffered 5.2 trillion VND in losses from typhoon Megi.

The other two hard-hit central provinces of Quang Binh and Nghe An were reported as suffering damages worth some 1.9 trillion VND and 1.2 trillion VND, respectively.

In an effort to help victims recover, the Prime Minister has ordered the disbursement of 660 billion VND from the State hedge budget and free supply of 11,000 tonnes of rice from the national rice reserves for disaster-hit areas.

In general, relief aid from various sources totalled almost 700 billion VND, over 14,000 tonnes of rice, over 153 tonnes of instant noodles, 58,000 boxes of mineral water bottles and many other daily necessities.

Weather forecasters have warned of further complicated developments of natural disasters during the rest of the year, asking responsible agencies to stay alert and strictly follow the Prime Minister’s recent urgent guidelines on storm and flood control./.

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Sunday, December 12, 2010

New TV show dramatises great escape

A television series on the life of Vietnamese revolutionaries in Con Dao Prison will be filmed this month by the Vietnam Film Studio (VFS) and HCM City Television (HTV).

The 30-part series, Cuoc Vuot Nguc Than Kyø (Perfect Gaolbreak), is based on a screenplay by Dinh Thien Phuc. It cost 10.8 million VND (500,000 USD).

The series' film production manager is Vuong Duc, the director, Vu Xuan Hung, and the cameraman, Vu Quoc Tuan.

The story is about the life of Vietnamese revolutionaries sent to Con Dao Prison during 1948 and 1950 while the war of resistance against the French colonialists was at its height.

It recounts a gaolbreak of a group of prisoners led by Hoang Bach, a revolutionary who was sentenced to 20 years.

Located on Con Dao Island, Con Dao Prison is known as the "Hell on Earth" where more than 200,000 prisoners, including leading Vietnamese revolutionaries, were jailed and nearly 20,000 died in atrocious conditions under the French and US-backed Sai Gon regimes.

Today, many cells and areas of the prison are preserved in memory of the country's national heroes.

"Through the film, we wanted to spotlight Vietnamese revolutionaries' remarkable spirit and work in achieving the country's freedom," Hung said.

After casting the roles, Hung and his crew will begin filming in Con Dao Prison later next month and then in HCM City .

To complete the film, Hung and his staff have conducted research on the prisoners.

"We wanted to help young audiences understand the spirit and revolutionary cause of Con Dao prisoners in Vietnamese history," he said. Post-production work on the film will be completed in February./.

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HCM City gets tougher on illegal motorbike racing

Drivers who participate in illegal motorbike racing on city streets will be fined and possibly criminally prosecuted under new city regulations, according to the HCM City People's Committee.

Col Vo Van Nhuan, head of HCM City Traffic Police, said the police and relevant agencies would work with bike mechanics to put an end to the modification of engines that make them more powerful and dangerous.

The motorbikes also often have their brake systems removed and have loud horns and noisy exhaust pipes during the races.

Nhuan said police would keep records of the racing and encourage vendors at night to keep local police informed of any illegal races.

The city People's Committee chairman, Le Hoang Quan, has urged districts to be as vigilant as Binh Thanh district in breaking up gangs of illegal motorbike drivers who threaten public safety.

The Traffic Safety Committee has lauded Binh Thanh district's effort in stopping illegal racing, an activity that the city has had little success in curbing in recent years.

Binh Thanh district police, Hang Xanh Traffic police and other police units recently entrapped 550 illegal drivers by using cars to set up blocks at a main road and several alleys.

Drivers whose bikes were seized at the time will not receive their bikes back until they present a letter of intent from their family in which they promise that their children will not race illegally.

Police will also hold meetings in communities to speak publicly about the violators' activities, prior to returning their bikes. Nhuan said more vigilance by police units was required, but that other city agencies should co-operate to help stop the illegal activity.

Families should teach their children about traffic safety and a healthy lifestyle, he added./.

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